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Health and Economic Growth:

Findings and Policy Implications

 <http://mitpress.mit.edu/main/home/default.asp> The MIT Press

 <http://mitpress.mit.edu/images/products/books/0262122766-f30.jpg> 


Edited by  <http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/author/default.asp?aid=28109>
Guillem López-Casasnovas,
<http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/author/default.asp?aid=28110> Berta Rivera
and  <http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/author/default.asp?aid=28111> Luis
Currais

Guillem López-Casasnovas is Professor of Economics and Director of the
Center of Research in Economics and Health at Pompeu Fabra University,
Barcelona.

Berta Rivera is Associate Professor of Economics at the University A Coruña
in Spain and Research Associate at the Center of Research in Economics and
Health at Pompeu Fabra University.

Luis Currais is Associate Professor of Economics at the University A Coruña
in Spain and Research Associate at the Center of Research in Economics and
Health at Pompeu Fabra University.


Contributors


Harold Alderman, Suchit Arora, Jere R. Behrman, David Bloom, Luis Currais,
John Hoddinott, Peter Howitt, Dean T. Jamison, Lawrence J. Lau, Guillem
López-Casasnovas, David Mayer-Foulkes, Edward Miguel, Olivier Morand, Joan
Muysken, Tomas J. Philipson, Berta Rivera, Xavier Sala-i-Martín, T. Paul
Schultz, Jaypee Sevilla, Rodrigo R. Soares, Jia Wang, Adriaan van Zon

Contents


Introduction: The Role Health Plays in Economic Growth
Guillem López-Casasnovas, Berta Rivera and Luis Currais


Health, Human Capital, and Economic Growth: A Schumpeterian Perspective
Peter Howitt


Health as Principal Determinant of Economic Growth
Adriaan van Zon and Joan Muysken


Health's Contribution to Economic Growth in an Environment of Partially
Endogenous Technical Progress
Dean T. Jamison, Lawrence J. Lau and Jia Wang


On the Health-Poverty Trap
Xavier Sala-i-Martin


Human Development Traps and Economic Growth
David Mayer-Foulkes


Health, Education, and Economic Development
Edward Miguel


Nutrition, Malnutrition, and Economic Growth
Harold Alderman, Jere R. Behrman and John Hoddinott


On Epidemiologic and Economic Transitions: A Historical View
Suchit Arora


Economic Growth, Health, and Longevity in the Very Long Term: Facts and
Mechanisms
Olivier F. Morand


Productivity, Labor Markets, and Health


Productive Benefits of Health: Evidence from Low-Income Countries
T. Paul Schultz


Individual Returns to Health in Brazil: A Quantile Regression Analysis
Berta Rivera and Luis Currais


Quantity of Life and the Welfare Costs of AIDS


The Economic Cost of AIDS in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Reassessment
Tomas J. Philipson and Rodrigo R. Soares

 

Scope

While human capital is a clear determinant of economic growth, only recently
has health's role in this process become a focus of serious academic
inquiry. By marrying the separate fields of health economics and growth
theory, this groundbreaking book explores the explicit mechanisms by which a
population's individual and collective health status affects a nation's
economic development and performance. International leaders from both fields
have contributed original essays that employ theoretical and empirical
perspectives on the relationship between health and economic growth,
including the relevant interconnections with investment in education, family
planning, and productivity.


Each of the book's five sections deals with a different aspect of this
dynamic. These include the channels through which health human capital
generates both higher income and individual well-being; the impact of health
on long-run development, economic growth, and poverty reduction; the link
between human capital levels and fertility and mortality rates, with models
that analyze demographic and epidemiological transitions; the quantitative
effect of better health on labor productivity and wages; and, finally, the
devastating effects of AIDS -- in underdeveloped countries the most deadly,
most economically adverse, and the surest barrier to growth -- on individual
well-being and populations, and the prospects for incentives for developing
new treatments. A concluding chapter integrates the different microeconomic
and macrodynamic analyses and draws some policy conclusions for future
study.